Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2024

Humble Pie - Amsterdam and Rt. 66

Rebooted...
Originally posted March 10, 2020

Humble Pie  - Live Paradiso
Amsterdam, NL
August 24, 1969
Soundboard @320


Set List:
1. The Sad Bag Of Shaky Jake
2. I Walk On Gilded Splinters
3. Desperation
4. Hallelujah I Love Her So
5. Wrist Job

Runtime - 29 Minutes 28 Seconds


*Original Notes*
I received this in a trade many years ago, late 80's early 90's, it's a SBD recording but not a great one. There is a lot of tape hiss due to the high generation. But since there is very little early Humble Pie,
this show is a favorite of mine.
The story goes on this one that it was recorded by the Dutch Radio Station VPRO during a festival like concert that included Deep Purple and Brian Auger's Trinity and several other bands. All the bands were recorded but the show was never broadcast as a complete concert in any way just as individual songs. According to The Highway Star, Deep Purple's Website, the radio station still has the original tapes and was going to release them on there own label but they never did. So if anybody that works at VPRO is reading this, please do me and everyone else a favor, make a copy of this from the Master Reel and post it somewhere for all to have instead of letting it sit and rot somewhere where no one gets to listen to it.
Anyway, I hope everyone enjoys this! 


****************************************************** 

Here's a show from the 1981 tour w/ some bonus tracks from the 1975 tour. Quality is very good (maybe an 8/10) for both shows.
Dates on the attached artwork are wrong, as can be confirmed by checking the track list, which includes tracks from On To Victory.

Tracks 1-8 were recorded in Los Angeles 1981, tracks 9-12 at the Spectrum in Philadelphia 1975.

Also, the lineup for the 1981 shows is not the classic Clem Clempson lineup of the 1975 show (as the artwork infers). In 1981, the band was Steve Marriott/Jerry Shirley/Bobby Tench/Booty Jones.


Humble Pie
Los Angeles 1981, tracks 9-12
Spectrum in Philadelphia 1975.
Liberated bootleg
Soundboard or FM sources@ 192
Artwork Included


Set List:
01 ~ I Don't Need No Doctor (10:01)
02 ~ Infatuation (5:23)
03 ~ 30 Days In The Hole (9:45)
04 ~ Tin Soldier (4:32)
05 ~ Fool For A Pretty Face (5:47)
06 ~ Route 66 (6:34)
07 ~ Bebop A Lula (2:22)
08 ~ Tulsa Time (3:20)
09 ~ Four Day Creep (3:18)
10 ~ Stone Cold Fever (8:53)
11 ~ C'mon Everybody (6:31)


Thanks to the original sources!


pass - fbsvw
 
 

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Humble Pie 1970 & 1973, Peter Frampton 1976

Humble Pie - Spectrum
"King Biscuit Flower Hour"
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania -1973
Broadcast date: September 11, 1988
@flac

Peter Frampton - (venue unknown)
"King Biscuit Flower Hour" -1976

Broadcast date: September 11, 1988
@flac

CDDA broadcast disc > WAV Exact Audio Copy & Audacity > FLAC Trader's Little Helper

DJ cue sheet included
complete broadcast (minus commercials)



101 Track 1 - 1kc TONE  0:40
102 Track 2 - Humble Pie  28:04
I Want You to Love Me ~ Stone Cold Fever ~ Come on Everybody ~
I Don't Need No Doctor

103 Track 3 - Peter Frampton  24:36
Somethin's Happening ~ It's a Plain Shame ~ (I'll Give You) Money ~ 
Do You Feel Like We Do104 Track
4 - Close; 0:15 

105 Track 5 - Frampton Promo  0:32
106 Track 6 - Humble Pie Promo  0:30

 

Humble Pie - Peel Session BBC Studios
September 20, 1970
Soundboard/FM Source @192

1 unchapterd file @60minues


Humble Pie, recorded in concert for the BBC as part of the John Peel Presents series from Sepetember 20, 1970.

It would be hard to say where Humble Pie were more huge – the U.S. or the UK. They were a staple in the diet of every vinyl collector and were played almost non-stop on most of the Underground FM stations at the time. They epitomized the growth of Hard Rock as a genre; the non-stop onslaught of guitars and stage swagger and they symbolized excess, almost as much as Led Zeppelin or The Rolling Stones.

Having formed in 1969 from elements of Small Faces (Steve Marriot), The Herd (Peter Frampton) Greg Ridley (Spooky Tooth), they achieved success almost out of the gate. By 1970 (when this concert was recorded), they had switched labels to A&M, got new management and their fortunes soared.

During 1970, with the Immediate label having finally collapsed Humble Pie signed to A&M Records, and Dee Anthony became their manager. Anthony was focused on the US market and discarded the acoustic set, instigating a more raucous sound with Marriott as the front man. The group’s first album for A&M, Humble Pie, was released later that year and alternated between progressive rock and hard rock. A single, “Big Black Dog”, was released to coincide with the album and failed to chart, however the band was becoming known for popular live rock shows in the US.

It was during this period that Peter Frampton acquired his famed “Phenix” guitar, the black 1954 Les Paul Custom which became his signature instrument and his favorite guitar for the next decade. Humble Pie was playing a run of shows at the Fillmore West in San Francisco in early December 1970, and during the first show Frampton was plagued by sound problems with his then-current guitar, a semi-acoustic Gibson 335, which was prone to unwanted feedback at higher volumes. After the show he was approached by fan and musician Mark Mariana, who loaned him a modified 1954 Gibson Les Paul, and by the end of the second show Frampton had become so enamored of the guitar that he offered to buy it on the spot, but Mariana refused payment. Frampton played it almost exclusively for the next ten years. It was featured on the cover of Frampton Comes Alive and was thought to have been destroyed in 1980 when a plane carrying Frampton’s stage equipment crashed in Venezuela during a South American tour, killing the crew, but with the guitar in fact surviving the accident with some minor damage. It was eventually returned to Frampton in 2011.

Frampton would leave a little over a year later and start that part of the legacy. But this 1970 concert captures the band during their halcyon days, with certainly no looking back.

I don’t you need to be reminded to turn this one up . .  .way up.



 

pass-fbsvw


++$++


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Monday, February 10, 2020

Peter Frampton - Show a long way

To me, it started with this band at the Beatclub and like every artist appearing in that show they had a longliving fan/fellowship over the years


The Herd @ Beatclub (FLAC, DVDRip)

 01 I Can Fly
02 From The Underworld
03 Paradise Lost
04 I Dont Want Our Loving To Die


 And then there was this great band also on Beatclub whose "I Don't Need No Doctor" and "Walk On Guilded Splinters" (originally by the "other doctor" aka the Nightripper) became one of those hits from my youth with a safe place in my heart


Humble Pie @ Beatclub (FLAC, DVD Rip)

01 Alabama 69 (1969-08-30 No 46)
02 Natural Born Boogie (1969-08-30 No 46)
03 The Sad Bag Of Shaky Jake (1970-01-30 No 51)
04 For Your Love (1970-09-05 No 58)
 


1970 On Stage BBC Peel's Sunday Show (MP3, see Info)

01 Four Day Creep
02 I'm Ready
03 Live With Me
04 Stone Cold Fever
05 Hallelujah I Love Her So
06 Walk On Gilded Splinters
07 The Sad Bag Of Shakey Jake
08 One Eyed Trouser Snake Rhumba
09 Big Black Dog
 



  And then, there was this half naked blonde guy whose poster was to be found in almost every girl's bedroom ;)

1972 BBC Paris Theatre (MP3, Broadcast)

01 It's A Plain Shame
02 Fig Tree Bay
03 The Lodger
04 Do You Feel Like We Do
05 Shine On
 

1995 Ohne Filter (MP3, german TV Rip)

01 Day in The Sun
02 You
03 No Answer
04 Just For Now
05 Show Me The Way
06 All I Want To Be (Is By Your Side)
07 Baby, I Love Your Way
08
09 Do You Feel Like We Do

2016-07-26 Charlotte NC (MP3, Net, see info)

01 Somethings Happening
02 Rebel Rebel
03 Doobie Wah
04 Lines on My Face
05 Show Me the Way
06 I'll Give You Money
07 Black Hole Sun
08 Baby I Love Your Way
09 Do You Feel Like We Do
10 Four Day Creep
11 While My Guitar Gently Weeps